MTSU student nurses host auction to fund mission of mercy

MTSU student nurses need the community’s help to fund a medical mission to Central America next month.

The MTSU Student Nurses Association will host a silent auction from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, April 15, in the first-floor lobby of the Cason-Kennedy Nursing Building.

MTSU student nurses prepare for a medical mission to Central America next month. The participants include, front row, from left, Terry Dewaratanawanich of Antioch, Tenn.; Andrea Phillips of Nolensville, Tenn.; Beth Schaller of Beavercreek, Ohio; Kelly English of Mt. Juliet, Tenn.; Amy Atwood of Nashville; and Bethany Baker of Murfreesboro. On the back row, from left are Mysti Motz of Murfreesboro; Tyler Davis of White House, Tenn.; Steve Tyree of Lascassas, Tenn.; Assistant Professor Paul Williamson; Tori Cox of Thompson’s Station, Tenn.; and Grace Zimmerman of Nashville. (photo submitted)

Items available for bid include Nashville Toffee Company candies, a Mary Kay makeup basket, a stethoscope, gift cards from local restaurants and more.

All proceeds will go toward the expenses of medical supplies and medications that 11 nursing students will take with them to Los Robles, Guatemala, May 18-26 to serve the medically needy.

Each member of the MTSU entourage, under the supervision of nursing professor and registered nurse Paul Williamson, will take 50 pounds of supplies to the small clinic in Los Robles. The supplies will include over-the-counter pain relievers, gastrointestinal medications and prenatal and children’s vitamins.

“The Guatemalans living in Los Robles are faced with many skin infections and malnutrition,” says student nurse Grace Zimmerman, a senior from Nashville.

“With the help of our professor and a Spanish translator, we hope to deliver health care and medications to hundreds of people in desperate need.”

Middle Tennessee Medical Center has donated $5,000 as well as medical supplies worth another $5,000. The group also has received medication donations from dental offices, hospitals and other supports, including MTSU’s Office of Education Abroad.

Auction winners must be present at 4 p.m. to pay and receive their items. For more information, contact Williamson at 615-494-8729 or paul.williamson@mtsu.edu.

For auction parking information, go to http://tinyurl.com/MTParkingMap12-13.

— Gina K. Logue (gina.logue@mtsu.edu)

School of Nursing to hold annual Health Fair April 11

2013 Health Fair flier webIt’s a one-stop shopping opportunity to help people have healthier, happier lives.

The MTSU School of Nursing will present its annual Health Fair from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, April 11, in the lobby of the Student Union Building.

Area vendors scheduled to provide health information include McCabe Vision, Nashville Cares, Infinity Birthing Center, the MTSU Pharmacy and the MTSU Center for Health and Human Services.

Various health screenings will be available, including blood pressure and glucose checks. The American Red Cross will be present to accept blood donations.

The fair is free and open to the public. For more information, contact the MTSU School of Nursing at 615-898-2437.

A printable campus map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTParkingMap12-13.

— Gina K. Logue (gina.logue@mtsu.edu)

MTSU, Columbia State Community College Ink Agreement

Middle Tennessee State University and Columbia State Community College administrators formally agreed Nov. 16 to help ease the transfer of Columbia State nursing students who want to upgrade their associate’s degrees to an MTSU bachelor’s degree. Nursing and academic officials at both schools praised the agreement and how it also involves Maury Regional Medical Center in Columbia. For more details, visit mtsunews.com/mtsu-cscc-sign-nursing-pact.

MTSU, Columbia State nursing pact a ‘win-win-win-win situation’

Middle Tennessee State University and Columbia State Community College administrators formally agreed Nov. 16 to help ease the transfer of Columbia State nursing students who want to upgrade their associate’s degrees to an MTSU bachelor’s degree.

The document, signed by MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee and Columbia State President Janet F. Smith, provides specific advisement for Columbia State students who intend to transfer to MTSU and encourages academic and administrative coordination between the institutions.

“This will help students and provide a critical need,” McPhee said. “The Tennessee Board of Regents wants to increase the number of graduates in critical areas, and this program will help take out the hassle, allowing for an easier transition. This pact with Columbia State is a true win-win for the students and faculty at both of our institutions.”

“The signing of this innovative articulation agreement is a first and has occurred because of institutions joining together, partnering, to find the best way for associate-degree RNs to obtain their Bachelor of Science in Nursing,” Smith said.

“It is an example of the commitment of MTSU and Columbia State to be a team in providing educational access for our citizens, workforce responsiveness for our agencies and industries and a stimulus for achievement of the higher education goals of our state.”

Nursing and academic officials at both schools praised the agreement and how it also involves Maury Regional Medical Center in Columbia.

“There are so many of their graduates who wish to obtain their BSN and this agreement will provide for seamless progression from the associate degree to the BSN,” said Dr. Karen Ward, interim director for the MTSU School of Nursing, which has one of the leading programs in the Southeast.

“We also are happy to have Maury Regional involved, thus assisting with clinical placement opportunities and, perhaps, additional faculty that will be needed. It’s a win-win-win-win situation: for the students, for CSCC, for Maury Regional and for MTSU.”

Deborah Lumpkins, vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer for Maury Regional, attended the signing, as did four students from the MTSU nursing program.

Barbara Blum, director of the Columbia State nursing program, called the agreement “a significant milestone” that helps students at both schools because it presents opportunity for career advancement as well as promoting excellence in patient care.”

Dr. Kae Fleming, dean of the Health Sciences Division at Columbia State, said her college’s nursing program is a “centerpiece of the educational experiences available for students.”

She added that the registered nursing associate’s degree is “workforce-ready” and performs a critical role in meeting the care excellence expectations of patients and the medical community.

“Many associate degree RNs have obtaining a BS degree as a personal goal, and the RN to BSN agreement between Columbia State and Middle Tennessee State, with Maury Regional Health Systems collaborating to provide advanced level nursing clinical experiences, offers a path to achieve this educational dream at in-state tuition rates with no commute,” Fleming said.

She said the Bachelor of Science in Nursing will be earned via a blend of courses at Columbia State, which has the community-college benefits of lower tuition, smaller class sizes and personal attention, followed by online classes through MTSU.

“On-ground sessions will be incorporated throughout the enrollment to maintain a sense of community and deliver support services,” Fleming said.

“Degree advancement opens doors for career advancement for nurses. Additionally, many acute-care providers have established goals for increasing the number of BSN-level nurses providing bedside care in response to the Institute of Medicine initiatives outlined in ‘The Future of Medicine: Nursing Education.’

“This articulation allows nurses in the service area to pursue lifelong learning, a habit directly aligned with the college’s mission.”

MTSU senior Connie Gellinger, a nontraditional nursing student who commutes from Thompson’s Station, called it a “fabulous” partnership.

“This is great,” Gellinger said. “It will allow for seamless transition from the associate degree into the bachelor’s program. The benefit is (being able to take) online courses, which is more flexible. You can still work and maintain a family life while you pursue advancement in your nursing career.”

Today’s agreement includes a “Program of Study” with the MTSU RN-to-BSN course requirements and outlines courses that must be taken at CSCC for transfer to MTSU. Also provided is a listing of the MTSU upper-division nursing courses that students must complete to earn the Bachelor of Science degree in nursing through MTSU.

The agreement will be reviewed, amended, updated and/or expanded by mutual consent by representatives of each institution.

— Randy Weiler (Randy.Weiler@mtsu.edu)

School of Nursing, Women’s Center choose interim leaders

Dr. Karen Ward is now at the helm of the MTSU School of Nursing, replacing Dr. Lynn Parsons, who stepped down to return to full-time instruction.

And Anne Fraley has been named interim director of MTSU’s June Anderson Center for Women and Nontraditional Students. Fraley replaces Terri Johnson, who resigned effective July 1 to become assistant dean for student multicultural affairs at Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas.

Dr. Karen Ward

Ward earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing in 1970 and her master’s degree in psychiatric mental health in 1972, both at Vanderbilt University, then taught at MTSU from 1974 to 1981. She earned a doctoral degree in developmental psychology at Cornell University in 1988 and rejoined MTSU’s nursing faculty in 1995.

“It gives me the opportunity to do the best I can for the students of the School of Nursing and to get faculty and students working together to produce the best nurses we can,” Ward said of being named interim director effective July 1.

Ward said she hopes to see MTSU’s School of Nursing become more technologically savvy, adding that the process of having more clinical simulations in certain classes already has begun.

Anne Fraley

A native of Hartford, Conn., who has lived in Tennessee nearly 12 years, Fraley is entering academia from a career largely spent in parish ministry in the Episcopal Church. Most recently, she was vicar of The Church of the Epiphany in Lebanon, Tenn., becoming rector when the church obtained parish status and later accepting the post of priest-in-charge.

Fraley earned her bachelor’s degree from Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., in 1979 and her master’s degree in divinity from Yale University in 1994. She said she believes both her work with the Young Women’s Christian Association and her experience as a priest will help her serve MTSU students, faculty and staff.

“Churches face the same issues of how to meet the needs of people who go there voluntarily and with something in mind for themselves,” said Fraley.

Both women will serve in the posts through the 2011-12 academic year. A national search will be conducted to fill each directorship permanently.

– Gina K. Logue, gklogue@ mtsu.edu